| Pit Schultz on 14 Apr 2001 06:53:34 -0000 |
[Date Prev] [Date Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Date Index] [Thread Index]
| [Nettime-bold] James Boyle : A Politics of Intellectual Property: Environmentalism For the Net? |
A Politics of Intellectual Property: Environmentalism For the Net?
James Boyle(1)
Introduction: This Article argues that we need a politics, or perhaps a
political economy, of intellectual property. Using the controversy over
copyright on the Net as a case-study and the history of the
environmental movement as a comparison, it offers a couple of modest
proposals about what such a politics might look like -- what theoretical
ideas it might draw upon and what constituencies it might unite.
I
"Code is Code" - The Logic of the Information Relation
Everyone says that we are moving to an information age. Everyone says
that the ownership and control of information is one of the most
important forms of power in contemporary society. These ideas are so
well-accepted, such cliches, that I can get away with saying them in a
law review article without footnote support. (For those blessedly
unfamiliar with law reviews, this is a status given to only the most
staggeringly obvious claims; the theory of evolution,(2) and the orbit
of the earth around the sun,(3) probably would not qualify.)
Beyond the claim that the information society exists, however, there is
surprisingly little theoretical work. Sadly for academics, the best
social theorists of the information age are still science fiction
writers and, in particular, cyberpunks -- the originators of the phrase
"cyberspace" and the premier fantasists of the Net. If one wants to
understand the information age, this is a good place to start.
Cyberpunk science fiction succeeded as a genre largely because it
combined a particular plot aesthetic with a particular conceptual
insight. The plot aesthetic was simple; the bad boy/film noir world of
the romantic lowlife. When juxtaposed to the 2-dimensional priggishness
of the normal science fiction hero, the cigarette smoking, drugged-out
petty outlaws and mirror-shaded ninja-chicks of cyberpunk seemed
rebellious, cynical and just, well, cool. The character-type is a
familiar one; James Dean could easily have played the hero of
Neuromancer.(4) The conceptual insight is not so familiar. Cyberpunk is
built on the extrapolation of two principal technologies, computers and
the Web on the one hand, and genetic engineering on the other. The theme
of cyberpunk is that the information age means the homologisation of all
forms of information -- whether genetic, electronic, or demographic. I
grew up believing that genes had to do with biology, petri dishes and
cells and that computers had to do with punch cards and magnetic disks.
It would be hard to imagine two more disparate fields. In contrast
cyberpunk sees only one issue ~ code ~ expressed in binary digits or the
C's,G's, A's and T's on a gene map.
II
Intellectual Property is the Legal Form of the Information Age
The cyberpunk writers also offer us a legal insight. The more one moves
to a world in which the message, rather than the medium, is the focus of
conceptual, and economic interest, the more central does intellectual
property become. Intellectual property is the legal form of the
information age. Like most property regimes, our intellectual property
regime will be contentious, in distributional, ideological and
efficiency terms. It will have effects on market power, economic
concentration and social structure. Yet, right now, we have no politics
of intellectual property -- in the way that we have a politics of the
environment or of tax reform. We lack a conceptual map of issues, a
rough working model of costs and benefits and a functioning
coalition-politics of groups unified by common interest perceived in
apparently diverse situations.
Why don't we have such a politics? One reason is that with a few
exceptions, the mass media coverage of the information age has been
focused firmly on "cyberporn" and its potential censorship. This is
rather like thinking that the most important feature of the industrial
revolution was that it allowed the mass-production -- and then the
regulation -- of pornographic magazines. Given the magnitude of the
changes occurring, and the relatively small differences between
pornography on-line and pornography anywhere else, a more trivial
emblematic concern would have been hard to find. It is intellectual
property, not the regulation of cyber-smut, that provides the key to the
distribution of wealth, power and access in the information society. The
intellectual property regime could make -- or break -- the educational,
political, scientific and cultural promise of the Net. Indeed, even if
our only concern were censorship, it would be perverse to concentrate
exclusively on the direct criminalisation of content by governments. The
digital world gives new salience to private censorship -- the control by
intellectual property holders of distribution of and access to
information. The recent Scientology cases are only the most obvious
manifestation of this tendency.(5)
The media were not the only ones to miss the boat. Lawyers and legal
academics largely followed suit. With a few exceptions, lawyers have
assumed that intellectual property was an esoteric and arcane field,
something that was only interesting (and comprehensible) to
practitioners in the field.(6) There is some question whether this
attitude was ever defensible; it certainly is not now. In terms of
ideology and rhetorical structure, no less than practical economic
effect, intellectual property is the legal form of the information age.
It is the locus of the most important decisions in information policy.
It profoundly affects the distribution of political and economic power
in the digital environment. It has impacts on issues ranging from
education to free speech. The "value" protected(7) by intellectual
property in the world economy is in the hundreds of billions of dollars
and growing all the time.
There are structural reasons why these tendencies will continue. The
first crucial aspect of the current information economy is the
increasing homologisation of forms of information. Think of the many
ways in which it now does not make sense to distinguish between
electronic and genetic information -- any more than between red books or
green books. Precisely because we conceive of them as (and have the
capability to treat them as) information, both present the same issues
of regulation -- privacy, access, public goods problems, and so on. As a
result, they have literally begun to overlap -- think of the storing
(and then the sale?) of the human genome on computer disk, or of the
private gene databases which add value to information developed through
publicly funded research and then demand patent options as the
prerequisite for access by outsiders.(8) Read about the
mathematical-biological/computer-science discipline of bio-informatics,
a discipline which is premised on the belief that information is
information, whether the medium is a double helix or an optical disk.(9)
We are now used to the idea that Microsoft retains rights over the lines
of code sitting on computer hard drives around the world. We can even
produce a utilitarian justification to explain why. It is a lot stranger
to think that women all over the country may carry in their bodies a
string of genetic information -- brca1, the so-called breast cancer gene
-- that has been patented by Myriad Genetics or that the Commerce
Department tried to patent the genes of a Guyami Indian woman who
possessed an abnormal resistance to leukemia.(10) From the point of view
of the information economy, though, the two cases are very similar; in
each case, strings of code are subject to intellectual property rights
granted in the belief that they will inspire further innovation and
discovery. The fact that this can be done in the face of the profound
shock most people feel at the ownership of human genes is a testament to
the universalizing logic of the information relation. (Whether it is
also a good thing is a different question.)
The process is not simply a legal one and the overlaps go in both
directions. Scan the science pages and see articles about the
possibility of using DNA sequences as incredibly powerful parallel
processing "computers."(11) Think of the software designers who create
electronic ecologies and then use those strings of computer code which
have proved themselves as survivors -- harnessing a form of "natural"
selection that Darwin would have recognised but could never have
imagined.(12) Put it all together and then compare this "reality" to the
way that we thought about computers on the one hand and biology on the
other, just twenty years ago. In the international information economy,
the medium is not the message. The medium is irrelevant.
The second crucial aspect of the information economy is a corollary of
the homologisation of forms of information; the decreasing proportion of
product cost and intellectual attention devoted to medium (diskettes,
cell-lines) rather than message (software, decoded DNA sequences). A
moment's thought will show that both of these aspects will give
increased importance to intellectual property. Reconceiving new areas of
science, commerce and research as "information issues" simply gives us
more fields in which it is likely we will spy the public goods problems
that intellectual property is supposed to solve. And the diminishing
portion of product cost devoted to medium rather than message means
that, within any given area, the public goods problems grow all the more
salient; (The price of the program rises, at least relative to the
falling price of the diskette onto which it can be copied.)
When I say that we lack a politics of intellectual property, I don't
mean to imply that this is the only type of "information politics" --
more like the most neglected. Look at the recent past. From the net
roots campaign against the Communications Decency Act to the titanic
industry lobbying over the Telecommunication Bill in which the CDA was
embedded, there have been many moments of political struggle and
agitation over digital commerce and communications regulation.(13) There
have been conferences, both Polyannish and despairing, over the use of
the Net by non profit groups, and thoughtful warnings of the dangers
posed by disparate access to information technologies. These are serious
points; the issue of access in particular. But in most cases, they are
isolated applications to a new technology of a familiar political
worldview or calculation of self-interest. Libertarians don't want
newspapers censored; their attitude to the Net is the same (though the
interactive quality of the technology, and the proprietary feeling that
novelty gives first adopters have certainly given more people a stake in
the protection of the system.) Non-profit groups have to adjust to
changes in communications technology, just like changes in tax law, or
the regulation of lobbying. Communications conglomerates have an
attitude towards bandwidth that seems indistinguishable from most
commercial entities' attitude towards publicly held real estate;
rationally enough, they want more, they want it free (ideally, they want
it subsidised) and they want to be able to exploit it without strings.
The left sees a resource with new importance -- access to information
technology -- and makes about it the points that it makes about access
to health care or education.(14) I don't mean to minimise these
concerns, and certainly don't want to make the claim that they are
somehow less fundamental than the ones I describe here. But I do think
that, precisely because of their comfortable familiarity, they miss some
of the differences in the politics of the information age, the ideas we
have not thought about so often or so well.
III
The Conceptual Structure of an Intellectual Land-Grab
Elsewhere, I have argued at unseemly length that there are structural
tendencies in our patterns of thinking and discourse about intellectual
property that lead us generally to "over" rather than
"under-protect".(15) I will summarise, rather than attempt to justify
those claims here. (A chart that might be helpful is provided in the
table on page 13.)
One of the roots of the problem is a conceptual one. The economic
analysis of information is beset by internal contradiction and
uncertainty; information is both a component of the perfect market and a
good that must be produced within that market. Under the former
characterisation, information is supposed to move towards perfection --
a state in which it is costless, instantly available and so on. Under
the latter characterisation, information must be commodified so as to
give its producers an incentive to produce. But each property right
handed out to ensure the production of information is a transaction cost
when seen from the perspective of market efficiency.(16)
The most succinct encapsulation of the problem comes from an article
co-written by the current head of the President's Council of Economic
Advisors, who in a former life was one of the most distinguished
scholars of information economics. "There is a fundamental conflict
between the efficiency with which markets spread information and the
incentives to acquire information."(17) This problem is often, though
not always "solved" by ignoring it. A pre-theoretical classification is
made, conventionally ascribing a certain problem to one or other realm
and the discussion then continues on that basis. Thus for example, we
tend to look at the field of intellectual property with a finely honed
sensitivity to "public goods" problems that might lead to under
production, while underestimating or failing to mention the efficiency
costs and other losses generated by the very rights we are granting.
Some conventional ascriptions visibly switch over time. The contemporary
proponents of legalising insider trading use the idea of the efficient
capital market to minimise or defend the practice. The first generation
of analyses saw the insider trade as the entrepreneur's incentive and
reward for Faustian recombinations of the factors of production. An
alternative method for smoothing over the tensions in the policy
analysis is for the analyst to acknowledge the tension between
efficiency and incentives, point out that there are some limitations
imposed on intellectual property rights, to conclude that there are both
efficiency-promoting and incentive promoting aspects to intellectual
property law, and then to imply that an optimal balance has been
struck.(18) (This is rather like saying that because fishermen throw
some fish back, we can assume over-fishing is not occurring.)
In general, then, I would claim there is a tendency to think that
intellectual property is a place to apply our "public goods/incentives
theory" rather than our "anti-monopoly/free-flow of information"
theory.(19) All by itself, this might push rhetoric and analysis towards
more expansive property rights. The tendency is compounded, however, by
two others.
First, courts are traditionally much less sensitive to First Amendment,
free speech and other "free flow of information arguments" when the
context is seen as private rather than public, property rather than
censorship. Thus, for example, the Supreme Court will refuse to allow
the state to ban flag burning, but is quite happy to create a property
right in a general word such as "Olympic," convey it to a private party
and then allow the private party selectively to refuse public usage of
the word. Backed by this state-sponsored "homestead law for the
language,"(20) the US Olympic Committee has decreed that the handicapped
may have their "Special Olympics," but that gay activists may not hold a
"Gay Olympics."(21) This, it seems, is not state censorship but private
property. (Emboldened, Justice Rehnquist advocated privatizing the
flag.)(22)
Second, intellectual property rights are given only for "original"
creation. But the idea of the original author or inventor implicitly
devalues the importance of the raw materials with which any creator
works -- the rhetorical focus on originality leads to a tendency to
undervalue the public domain. After all, the novelist who, as Paul
Goldstein puts it, "craft[s] out of thin air" does not need a rich and
fertile public domain on which to draw. The ironic result is that a
regime which lauds and proposes to encourage the great creator, may in
that process actually function to take away the raw materials which
future creators need to produce their little piece of innovation. One
interesting thought experiment is to wonder whether Bill Gates could
have developed the highly derivative program of MS-DOS if, at the time
that he developed it, the current set of expansive copyright and patent
protections for software had been in place. My book provides a lengthy
discussion of this tendency so I will not dwell on it here.
Tensions In an Intellectual Property System I have arranged these
tensions in two vertical sets. Each set is not a list of corollaries,
indeed they are sometimes internally contradictory. Thinking of the
subject of intellectual property as "information" rather than
"invention," does not commit oneself to Northrop Frye's views about the
nature of artistic creation. It certainly does not entail the idea that
intellectual property should protect investment and labour--in fact, the
"efficiency" perspective tends to eschew intellectual property rights
altogether. Let me also acknowledge that any particular portion of
information regime is likely to mix and match the columns, like a
restaurant patron picking four from column B and one from column A.
Nevertheless, the members of each column are most likely to be found in
popular and scholarly discourse when linked to their vertical
neighbours. Under the guise of resolving these problems--the effect of
the author vision is to make the items in the middle column either
disappear or recede in importance.
Tensions in an Intellectual Property SystemSubject
MatterInformationInnovation
Economic PerspectiveEfficiency Incentives
Paradigmatic Conception of ProblemsTransaction Cost Problems.
Barriers to the free flow of information lead to the inhibition of
innovation/ inadequate circulation of information Public Goods
Problems. Inadequate incentives for future production leads to the
inhibition of innovation/ inadequate circulation of information
Reward (if any)
for..Effort/Investment/RiskOriginality/Transformation
View of the Public DomainFinite Resources for future
creatorsInfinite Resources for future creators
Vision of the productive processDevelopment based on existing
material."Poetry can only be made out of other poems; novels out
of other novels. All of this was much clearer before the
assimilation of literature to private enterprise." (23)Creation ex
nihilo. "Copyright is about sustaining the conditions of
creativity that enable an individual to craft out of thin air an
Appalachian Spring, a Sun Also Rises, a Citizen Kane."(24)
Normative Starting PointFree speech/Free circulation of ideas and
information. Property rights -- the creator's "natural" right, the
reward for past creation, the incentive to produce again.
So much for the background. Now a brief case study. The difficulty is
not in finding an example of intellectual property expansion, but in
knowing which one to pick. The last few years have seen the expansion of
first copyright and then patent to cover software, the patenting of
life-forms and human genes, the extension of copyright term limits.
Speaking not to the level of protection, but to the current conception
of intellectual property law, it is interesting to note that current
legislation proposes that the Copyright Office and the Patent Office
should cease to be part of the government -- being converted instead to
government corporations or "performance based organisations" which would
thus be forced to pay greater attention to their "users" and might even
be funded through user fees.(25) The idea that the rights-holders are
the true "users" or "clients" of the office is a striking one. On the
international level we have seen the use of the GATT to turn
intellectual property violations into trade violations, thus codifying a
particular vision of intellectual property and sanctifying it with the
label of "The Market."(26) The example I will pick, however, is the
Clinton Administration's proposal for copyright on the Net, which is now
hanging somewhere in legislative limbo.
IV
A Brief Case-Study: Copyright on The Net
If the information society has an iconic form (one could hardly say an
embodiment) it is the Internet. The Net is the anarchic, decentralised
network of computers that provides the main locus of digital
interchange. While Vice-President Gore, the Commerce Department and the
National Telecommunications and Information Administration were planning
the "information superhighway" the Net was becoming it.
Accordingly, if the government produced a proposal that laid down the
ground rules for the information economy, that profoundly altered the
distribution of property rights over this extremely important resource
and that threatened to "lock in" the power of current market leaders,
one would expect a great deal of attention to be paid by lawyers,
scholars and the media. Nothing could be further from the truth. The
appearance of the Clinton Administration "White Paper"(27) on
intellectual property on the National Information Infrastructure
produced almost no press reaction. The same was true of the introduction
and eventual stalling of the White Paper's legislative proposals in both
the House and the Senate.(28) Given the potential ramifications of the
legislation, this alone, it seems to me, would be strong evidence for
the proposition that greater scrutiny of our intellectual policy making
is needed. But the problem lies deeper.
Elsewhere I, and many others, have written about the problems with the
White Paper's account of current law, its distressing tendency to
misstate, minimise or simply ignore contrary cases, policy and
legislative history, its habit of presenting as settled, that which is
in fact a matter of profound dispute.(29) There have also been
thoughtful analyses some of the potential negative effects of the White
Paper and its implementing legislation, particularly focusing on the
consequences for libraries, for software innovation and for privacy.(30)
Defenders of the White Paper have argued that its proposals are
necessary to protect content on, and encourage fuller use and faster
growth of, the Net.(31)